BitClub Network terminate early investor contracts

BitClub Network’s original premise saw affiliates invest on the promise of a 1000 day ROI.

When the anonymous owners of the scheme realized they were going to run out of newly invested funds long before 1000 days was up, they changed the ROI maturity period to 600 days.

The idea was that affiliates who initially invested would re-invest after 600 days, giving BitClub Network more breathing room.

Evidently this change wasn’t enough, with the company now set to dump early investor contracts.

In a move BitClub Network acknowledge “members are not going to like”, the company has affiliates who invested between September 14th 2014 and June 30th 2015 will no longer receive a ROI.

Within the context of BitClub Network’s 1000 and 600 day ROI maturity period, September 14th 2014 was 714 days ago today. June 30th 2015 was 425 days ago.

BitClub Network claim the reason behind the dumping of early contracts is because affiliates who invested early have ‘made back a substantial return‘.

By eliminating these early shares it will boost the daily payout on a per share basis for everyone else.

It will also allow us to go back to paying for 1,000 days on all the contracts instead of 600 days.

The return to 1000 day contracts will likely see BitClub Network reduce the rate newly invested funds are used to pay off existing investors, once again giving them more breathing room.

If you purchased a share that was only good for 600 days you will see an extra 400 days added to your mining time.

The takeaway from the changes is that if BitClub Network’s mining operations were as profitable as represented, there simply wouldn’t be a problem.

BitClub Network solicit investment from affiliates, purportedly put all of it towards mining equipment and mine bitcoin. Whatever bitcoin is mined is distributed among affiliates, with hardware upgrades acquired as needed.

While this does happen to some extent (certainly not with all invested funds), what BitClub Network have come to terms with is that under this model current investors are screwed.

In addition to bitcoin mining, BitClub Network have obviously padded ROI payouts to early investors with subsequently invested funds.

This drain on the system over time likely means, under the current distribution formula, recent BitClub Network investors are not going to see a ROI on their initial investments.

The solution?

Scrap early investor positions that have been paid off and hope that subsequent investment plus a return to a 1000 day maturity period works out.

BitClub Network’s token mining operations have never 1:1 accounted for the ROI it pays its affiliates.

Instead the company continues to hope that

eventually the market will adjust and either the price of Bitcoin will shoot up, or the difficulty will drop making large scale operations like ours more profitable.

The stretching out of existing contracts to a 1000 day maturity period was primarily done so in the hope that one of the above happens. Otherwise BitClub Network is inevitably going to run out of invested funds to distribute and collapse entirely.

There’s only so much pre-mined ClubCoin the company can palm off before affiliates realize the coins aren’t actually worth anything.

A new attempt to solicit more investment from existing affiliates is the introduction of five “trading pools”.

One thing not mentioned in this post (probably for brevity) is that a major circumstance affecting miners is that bitcoin’s “anti-inflationary” mechanism kicks in roughly every 4 years on which the amount of BTC created into circulation is “halved.”

When Bitcoin started the “reward” for solving a new block (mathematically complex puzzle allowing the matching of a block of transactions) was 50 BTC.

In late 2012 the reward became 25 BTC.

In July 2016 it became 12.5 BTC (with block solutions bring stacked onto the blockchain roughly every 10 minutes).

Unlike Onecoin or Swiscoin which “splits” and “doubles” their pseudo-coins and ponzi tokens without affecting value, when bitcoin’s distribution mechanism causes it to “halve” every x# of blocks (approx. every 4 years) the price is fully determined by the open market.

Bitcoin’s recent halving in July saw an initial bump to value, but readjusted down for several reasons, including a $70MM heist from popular bitcoin exchange, BitFinex.

The thing about block rewards halving is that bitcoin price must literally double in order for miners to maintain the same expectations prior to the halving (or enough nodes need to drop out of the “competition” for remaining miners to operate at a significantly lower “difficulty” to capture/ solve twice the amount of blocks.

Since market price has NOT doubled and difficulty has NOT decreased enough to make up for the decreased miner ROI, THIS is certainly one of the root causes for recent announcements if declining profitability (at least in the short-term).

Until a balance between market price increases and network difficulty decreases reach an equilibrium, no mining operation, cloud or otherwise, is seeing near the gains they experienced earlier in the year.

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